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Diencephalic versus Hippocampal Amnesia in Alzheimer’s Disease: The Possible Confabulation-Misidentification Phenotype
BACKGROUND: Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is clinically heterogeneous, including the classical-amnesic (CA-) phenotype and some variants. OBJECTIVE: We aim to describe a further presentation we (re)named confabulation-misidentification (CM-) phenotype. METHODS: We performed a retrospective longitudinal c...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
IOS Press
2023
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9881034/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36442200 http://dx.doi.org/10.3233/JAD-220919 |
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author | Abbate, Carlo Trimarchi, Pietro D. Fumagalli, Giorgio G. Gallucci, Alessia Tomasini, Emanuele Fracchia, Stefania Rebecchi, Isabella Morello, Elisabetta Fontanella, Anna Parisi, Paola M.R. Tartarone, Federica Giunco, Fabrizio Ciccone, Simona Nicolini, Paola Lucchi, Tiziano Arosio, Beatrice Inglese, Silvia Rossi, Paolo D. |
author_facet | Abbate, Carlo Trimarchi, Pietro D. Fumagalli, Giorgio G. Gallucci, Alessia Tomasini, Emanuele Fracchia, Stefania Rebecchi, Isabella Morello, Elisabetta Fontanella, Anna Parisi, Paola M.R. Tartarone, Federica Giunco, Fabrizio Ciccone, Simona Nicolini, Paola Lucchi, Tiziano Arosio, Beatrice Inglese, Silvia Rossi, Paolo D. |
author_sort | Abbate, Carlo |
collection | PubMed |
description | BACKGROUND: Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is clinically heterogeneous, including the classical-amnesic (CA-) phenotype and some variants. OBJECTIVE: We aim to describe a further presentation we (re)named confabulation-misidentification (CM-) phenotype. METHODS: We performed a retrospective longitudinal case-series study of 17 AD outpatients with the possible CM-phenotype (CM-ADs). Then, in a cross-sectional study, we compared the CM-ADs to a sample of 30 AD patients with the CA-phenotype (CA-ADs). The primary outcome was the frequency of cognitive and behavioral features. Data were analyzed as differences in percentage by non-parametric Chi Square and mean differences by parametric T-test. RESULTS: Anterograde amnesia (100%) with early confabulation (88.2%), disorientation (88.2%) and non-infrequently retrograde amnesia (64.7%) associated with reduced insight (88.2%), moderate prefrontal executive impairment (94.1%) and attention deficits (82.3%) dominated the CM-phenotype. Neuropsychiatric features with striking misidentification (52.9%), other less-structured delusions (70.6%), and brief hallucinations (64.7%) were present. Marked behavioral disturbances were present early in some patients and very common at later stages. At the baseline, the CM-ADs showed more confabulation (p < 0.001), temporal disorientation (p < 0.02), misidentification (p = 0.013), other delusions (p = 0.002), and logorrhea (p = 0.004) than the CA-ADs. In addition, more social disinhibition (p = 0.018), reduction of insight (p = 0.029), and hallucination (p = 0.03) persisted at 12 months from baseline. Both the CA- and CM-ADs showed anterior and medial temporal atrophy. Compared to HCs, the CM-ADs showed more right fronto-insular atrophy, while the CA-ADs showed more dorsal parietal, precuneus, and right parietal atrophy. CONCLUSION: We described an AD phenotype resembling diencephalic rather than hippocampal amnesia and overlapping the past-century description of presbyophrenia. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-9881034 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2023 |
publisher | IOS Press |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-98810342023-02-08 Diencephalic versus Hippocampal Amnesia in Alzheimer’s Disease: The Possible Confabulation-Misidentification Phenotype Abbate, Carlo Trimarchi, Pietro D. Fumagalli, Giorgio G. Gallucci, Alessia Tomasini, Emanuele Fracchia, Stefania Rebecchi, Isabella Morello, Elisabetta Fontanella, Anna Parisi, Paola M.R. Tartarone, Federica Giunco, Fabrizio Ciccone, Simona Nicolini, Paola Lucchi, Tiziano Arosio, Beatrice Inglese, Silvia Rossi, Paolo D. J Alzheimers Dis Research Article BACKGROUND: Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is clinically heterogeneous, including the classical-amnesic (CA-) phenotype and some variants. OBJECTIVE: We aim to describe a further presentation we (re)named confabulation-misidentification (CM-) phenotype. METHODS: We performed a retrospective longitudinal case-series study of 17 AD outpatients with the possible CM-phenotype (CM-ADs). Then, in a cross-sectional study, we compared the CM-ADs to a sample of 30 AD patients with the CA-phenotype (CA-ADs). The primary outcome was the frequency of cognitive and behavioral features. Data were analyzed as differences in percentage by non-parametric Chi Square and mean differences by parametric T-test. RESULTS: Anterograde amnesia (100%) with early confabulation (88.2%), disorientation (88.2%) and non-infrequently retrograde amnesia (64.7%) associated with reduced insight (88.2%), moderate prefrontal executive impairment (94.1%) and attention deficits (82.3%) dominated the CM-phenotype. Neuropsychiatric features with striking misidentification (52.9%), other less-structured delusions (70.6%), and brief hallucinations (64.7%) were present. Marked behavioral disturbances were present early in some patients and very common at later stages. At the baseline, the CM-ADs showed more confabulation (p < 0.001), temporal disorientation (p < 0.02), misidentification (p = 0.013), other delusions (p = 0.002), and logorrhea (p = 0.004) than the CA-ADs. In addition, more social disinhibition (p = 0.018), reduction of insight (p = 0.029), and hallucination (p = 0.03) persisted at 12 months from baseline. Both the CA- and CM-ADs showed anterior and medial temporal atrophy. Compared to HCs, the CM-ADs showed more right fronto-insular atrophy, while the CA-ADs showed more dorsal parietal, precuneus, and right parietal atrophy. CONCLUSION: We described an AD phenotype resembling diencephalic rather than hippocampal amnesia and overlapping the past-century description of presbyophrenia. IOS Press 2023-01-03 /pmc/articles/PMC9881034/ /pubmed/36442200 http://dx.doi.org/10.3233/JAD-220919 Text en © 2023 – The authors. Published by IOS Press https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. |
spellingShingle | Research Article Abbate, Carlo Trimarchi, Pietro D. Fumagalli, Giorgio G. Gallucci, Alessia Tomasini, Emanuele Fracchia, Stefania Rebecchi, Isabella Morello, Elisabetta Fontanella, Anna Parisi, Paola M.R. Tartarone, Federica Giunco, Fabrizio Ciccone, Simona Nicolini, Paola Lucchi, Tiziano Arosio, Beatrice Inglese, Silvia Rossi, Paolo D. Diencephalic versus Hippocampal Amnesia in Alzheimer’s Disease: The Possible Confabulation-Misidentification Phenotype |
title | Diencephalic versus Hippocampal Amnesia in Alzheimer’s Disease: The Possible Confabulation-Misidentification Phenotype |
title_full | Diencephalic versus Hippocampal Amnesia in Alzheimer’s Disease: The Possible Confabulation-Misidentification Phenotype |
title_fullStr | Diencephalic versus Hippocampal Amnesia in Alzheimer’s Disease: The Possible Confabulation-Misidentification Phenotype |
title_full_unstemmed | Diencephalic versus Hippocampal Amnesia in Alzheimer’s Disease: The Possible Confabulation-Misidentification Phenotype |
title_short | Diencephalic versus Hippocampal Amnesia in Alzheimer’s Disease: The Possible Confabulation-Misidentification Phenotype |
title_sort | diencephalic versus hippocampal amnesia in alzheimer’s disease: the possible confabulation-misidentification phenotype |
topic | Research Article |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9881034/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36442200 http://dx.doi.org/10.3233/JAD-220919 |
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